The certification battle for Thalapathy Vijay’s blockbuster ‘Leo’ intensifies with the CBFC filing a caveat in the Supreme Court. This preemptive move ensures the board’s voice is heard before any adverse ruling, stalling potential ex-parte decisions from producers.
Flashback to December 2023: KV N Productions submitted ‘Leo’ for CBFC scrutiny. The examining committee flagged specific scenes and dialogues for edits. Makers implemented changes and resubmitted, but a wave of objections led to a revising committee referral. Pongal release dreams dashed, producers sued in Madras High Court.
A single judge’s January 9 order compelled UA certification, but a division bench quashed it. Producers rushed to the Supreme Court, which on January 15 declined to interfere, pushing Madras HC for a January 20 verdict. Now, CBFC’s caveat fortifies their position.
Vijay’s swan song on celluloid boasts a stellar cast including Pooja Hegde, Bobby Deol, and Prakash Raj. Post-release, the superstar eyes a political career. The standoff pits board’s complaint-driven process against producers’ timeline pressures.
Industry insiders note this as a textbook case of certification hurdles clashing with festive release windows. CBFC defends its mandate under the Cinematograph Act, emphasizing public sensitivities. Producers argue resubmissions should suffice.
With Pongal buzz faded, ‘Leo’ awaits resolution. The Supreme Court’s role could redefine film clearance timelines, balancing artistic expression and censorship norms in Tamil cinema’s powerhouse era.